Ongoing contestations: the use of racial signifiers in post-apartheid South Africa |
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Authors: | Daniel Hammett |
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Institution: | 1. School of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies , University of Witwatersrand , Braamfontein , South Africa D.Hammett@ed.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | Despite hopes for the development of a non-racial citizenry in South Africa, race remains a salient factor in identity claims. Much of the recent literature has focused on issues of black and white identities or on discussions of the reification or erasure of racial identities. This paper addresses questions of coloured identity in South Africa to explore the ways in which these identities are formed through iterative processes and continually in flux. Through a series of vignettes I argue that identity claims are frequently incomplete, uncertain and reworked in different and changing contexts. I highlight the shortcomings of ideas of erasure and reification when analysing identity claims and argue for a more nuanced approach that provides for consideration of post-apartheid racial identities as complex, dynamic and contested. |
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Keywords: | South Africa race coloured reification erasure |
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